Search
-
University cricketers highlight the need for blood donation
https://le.ac.uk/news/2017/may/university-cricketers-highlight-the-need-for-blood-donation
Players from the University of Leicester first and seconds cricket team and development squad dressed in their cricket whites to donate blood and help save and improve lives.
-
Mining big data
https://le.ac.uk/research/stories/human-health/mining-big-data
Major trauma or life threatening injuries is the most likely cause of fatality in children and adults up to the age of 55 in the UK, causing some 3,000 hospital deaths a year.
-
Gentrification expert discusses 'managed decline' of estates for BBC
https://le.ac.uk/news/2018/september/gentrification-expert-discusses-2018managed-decline2019-of-estates-for-bbc
The managed decline of inner-city social housing Loretta Lees, Professor of Human Geography at the University of Leicester, comments on councils' increasingly common policy of managed decline of inner-city estates ahead of regeneration.
-
Black holes could grow as large as 50 billion suns research shows
https://le.ac.uk/news/2015/december/black-holes-could-grow-as-large-as-50-billion-suns-research-shows
Black holes at the heart of galaxies could swell to 50 billion times the mass of the sun before losing the discs of gas they rely on to sustain themselves, according to research by Professor Andrew King from the Department of Physics and Astronomy.
-
Andrew Dunn: Page 124
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/socscilibrarians/author/andrew_dunn/page/124/
Academic Librarian.
-
Andrew Dunn: Page 157
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/socscilibrarians/author/andrew_dunn/page/157/
Academic Librarian.
-
Company’s mission to revolutionise agriculture and eliminate global waste takes off at Space Park Leicester
https://le.ac.uk/news/2023/september/messium-space-park
Agri-tech start-up Messium joins the European Space Agency – Business Incubation Centre for the United Kingdom (ESA-BIC UK) programme at Space Park Leicester.
-
Pick your poison study examines the use of plant poison on prehistoric weaponry
https://le.ac.uk/news/2015/march/pick-your-poison-study-examines-the-use-of-plant-poison-on-prehistoric-weaponry
Archaeologists have long believed that our ancestors used poisons extracted from plants such as foxgloves and hemlock to make their weapons more lethal and kill their prey more swiftly.
-
Mars Science Laboratory Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 30
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/mars/page/30/
Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester
-
Andrew Dunn: Page 144
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/socscilibrarians/author/andrew_dunn/page/144/
Academic Librarian.